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July 6, 2008 12:37:22 PM CDT



Mergers & Acquisitions

Private equity may be Wall Street's favorite fad diet, but sometimes a good, old-fashioned takeover is just what the market ordered

Stories

Stories 21 - 40 of 227

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  • May 2008
    • Microsoft Aims for Yahoo's Search Ad Biz

      Microsoft Aims for Yahoo's Search Ad Biz

      Microsoft's new offer to Yahoo includes breaking up the company and buying its search-advertising business, notions that have left Yahoo execs cold, the Wall Street Journal reports. Under the plan, Yahoo would sell its Asian assets and let Microsoft buy a minority stake in what's left of the company. More »

    • Microsoft, Yahoo in Talks for Partial Buyout

      Microsoft, Yahoo in Talks for Partial Buyout

      Microsoft is back at Yahoo's bargaining table, this time seeking a partial acquisition of the Internet portal, the Wall Street Journal reports. Buyout talks fizzled earlier this month, but billionaire Carl Icahn's push for a proxy war has left Yahoo honchos feeling shareholder pressure to cut a deal, though today they warned one may not happen. More »

    • Yahoo Says Icahn Doesn't Understand Full Picture

      Yahoo Says Icahn Doesn't Understand Full Picture

      Hours after Carl Icahn began his quest to take over Yahoo’s board, the company issued a statement saying he has a "significant misunderstanding" of the recent Microsoft purchase offer, the Wall Street Journal reports. Icahn wants to unseat the current Yahoo board, replace it with one of his own, and force the company to try to forge a deal with Microsoft. More »

    • CBS Shells Out $1.8B to Buy CNET

      CBS Shells Out $1.8B to Buy CNET

      CBS has agreed to buy CNET for $1.8 billion, the Wall Street Journal reports. The merger comes just as CNET was facing a full-scale shareholder revolt. Now, those investors are getting $11.50 a share, a price the stock hasn’t touched in two years and a 45% premium on yesterday’s close. Those shares immediately soared to $11.30 in premarket trading. More »

    • Icahn to Move Ahead With Yahoo Proxy Fight

      Icahn to Move Ahead With Yahoo Proxy Fight

      Billionaire investor Carl Icahn will move ahead with his plan to unseat Yahoo's current board of directors and force a sale to Microsoft, Reuters reports. Icahn, who has bought about 50 million Yahoo shares since Microsoft withdrew its offer May 3, has lined up 12 members for his dissident board ahead of tomorrow's deadline. The move is risky because Microsoft has given no indication whether it will renew its offer for a new board. More »

    • Icahn Grabs Yahoo Stake, Could Try to Force Sale

      Icahn Grabs Yahoo Stake, Could Try to Force Sale

      A new player has entered the Microsoft-Yahoo epic, the Wall Street Journal reports: billionaire investor Carl Icahn. He has bought about a 4% stake in Yahoo since Microsoft withdrew its offer to buy on May 3. Icahn will decide by tomorrow whether to launch an attempt to take over Yahoo's board and perhaps force a sale. More »

    • Italian Firm to Buy DRS Technologies

      Italian Firm to Buy DRS Technologies

      Italy's biggest defense contractor has agreed to buy DRS Technologies Inc. for $5.3 billion and grab a share of America's defense market, the Wall Street Journal reports. Finmeccanica will purchase the defense-electronics firm for $81 per share, a 32% premium on share price, pending approval by Washington. The deal is expected to close by year's end. More »

    • HP, Looking for Edge, Close to Buying EDS for $12-13B

      HP, Looking for Edge, Close to Buying EDS for $12-13B

      Hewlett-Packard is near a deal to buy Electronic Data Systems for $12-13 billion, the Wall Street Journal reports, an acquisition that would make it more competitive in the services sector with rival IBM. Confirmation was expected soon (HP admitted “advanced discussions” were underway), even as the tech consulting and outsourcing company, valued at $9.5 billion, saw its stock soar on the news. More »

    • Cablevision Buys Newsday

      Cablevision Buys Newsday

      Cablevision will pay Tribune Co. $650 million for Newsday , the companies said this morning. The cable operator's bid for the Long Island daily and its free offshoot amNew York topped $580 million offers from New York Daily News owner Mortimer Zuckerman and News Corp., reports the Wall Street Journal. More »

    • Murdoch Drops Newsday Bid

      Murdoch Drops Newsday Bid

      Rupert Murdoch has dropped his $580 million bid for Newsday . Cable operator Cablevision has offered $650 million for the Long Island daily, and Murdoch’s News Corp. said a higher bid would be “uneconomical.” The media tycoon’s dropout was unexpected, Reuters says, considering Murdoch recently told investors a deal was nearly done. A $580 million bid from Mortimer Zuckerman, owner of the rival Daily News , remains on the table. More »

    • Microsoft Not About to Buy Facebook (or Yahoo)

      Microsoft Not About to Buy Facebook (or Yahoo)

      Rumors that Microsoft is about to buy Facebook are just rumors: Despite the press corps’ desire to keep the Microsoft acquisition jones alive, it's not going to happen anytime soon, writes David Kirkpatrick in Forbes . And talk of the Yahoo deal suddenly resurfacing? Forget about it. Still, Microsoft may be interested in Facebook far down the road—the possibility of gaining the bank of personal info is endlessly tempting. More »

    • Sprint in Talks to Sell Struggling Nextel Unit

      Sprint in Talks to Sell Struggling Nextel Unit

      Sprint is considering selling or spinning off its Nextel division, signaling the end of a troubled, disappointing merger, the Wall Street Journal reports. Talks are already under way with Nextel founder Morgan O'Brien, who would integrate the unit into his new wireless public-safety network, and other prospective buyers, including private-equity firms. More »

    • Yahoo Still Open to Offers: Yang

      Yahoo Still Open to Offers: Yang

      Though Microsoft's courtship of Yahoo came to an unhappy end, Yahoo is still open to suitors, even Microsoft—at the right price, insists CEO Jerry Yang. Yahoo is in talks with other companies about ways to boost its value, and while Yahoo isn't in a rush to sell, executives are willing to listen to any would-be buyer, Yang tells Bloomberg as he faces mounting shareholder criticism for letting the deal get away. More »

    • T-Mobile Parent Mulling Bid for Sprint Nextel

      T-Mobile Parent Mulling Bid for Sprint Nextel

      T-Mobile parent Deutsche Telekom may bid for troubled Sprint-Nextel, a deal that would move the German telecom to the top of the US mobile communications heap, ahead of AT&T and Verizon, reports the Wall Street Journal. DT increasingly has looked to global options to help fuel earnings hurt by competition and sagging landline revenue at home. More »

    • Microsoft Boosts Offer, Launches Talks With Yahoo

      Microsoft Boosts Offer, Launches Talks With Yahoo

      Microsoft and Yahoo are holding active merger talks, with Microsoft willing to increase its offer “by several dollars,” sources tell the New York Times . The negotiations come as a major breakthrough after months of stalemate; Yahoo shareholders have been fielding calls from both sides seeking to arrive at an acceptable price. Shareholders had sought  $35-$37 a share; Microsoft is said to be willing to go as high as $33. More »

    • Microsoft Edges Toward Hostile Bid

      Microsoft Edges Toward Hostile Bid

      Microsoft appears to be edging closer to a hostile bid for Yahoo, the Wall Street Journal reports; an announcement of the company's next move is expected today. Price will be a key factor: CEO Steve Ballmer told employees yesterday he won't pay a "dime above" what he thinks Yahoo is worth. Yahoo shareholders are looking for $35 to $37 a share; Ballmer's original offer was worth $29.48 a share at the close yesterday. More »

    • Cut the Charade: Let Rupert Have His Way With Journal

      Cut the Charade: Let Rupert Have His Way With Journal

      Let’s stop kidding ourselves, Jack Shafer writes in Slate: Rupert Murdoch is seizing control of the Wall Street Journal , and we might as well be done with the “Special Committee” that was supposed to protect editorial independence. The Bancroft family insisted on the creation of the board, which then proved itself  "a set of high-paid flunkies" who sat on their hands as the paper’s top editor was forced out. More »

    • Microsoft Still Pondering Yahoo Options

      Microsoft Still Pondering Yahoo Options

      Microsoft's board met yesterday to discuss the next move in its bid for Yahoo but didn't make a decision, the Wall Street Journal reports. Directors have given CEO Steve Ballmer broad leeway to decide between going hostile or walking away from the bid, and insiders say it could still go either way. An announcement is expected later this week. More »

  • April 2008
    • XM and Sirius Delay Meetings as FCC Weighs Merger

      XM and Sirius Delay Meetings as FCC Weighs Merger

      XM and Sirius both postponed annual shareholder meetings as they awaited final FCC approval of their planned merger, the Washington Post reports. The nation’s only satellite-radio operators are expected to win approval, but their plans have faced new criticism from lawmakers and state attorneys, and there may yet be conditions on the partnership. More »

    • Ballmer May Seek Middle Path on Yahoo

      Ballmer May Seek Middle Path on Yahoo

      Steve Ballmer's next move on Yahoo is expected momentarily, and one option is to nominate a proxy slate for the board of directors, the Wall Street Journal reports, but hold off on making a new hostile bid for the company. Microsoft could buy time for setting a new price for Yahoo, which rejected the company's $42-billion bid, but keep the option of a hostile campaign later. More »

Stories 21 - 40 of 227

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This image released by The Field Musem in Chicago shows a painting...   (Getty Images)
US NEWS GATORWRESTLERS 1 FL   (KRT Photos)
The Yahoo tent at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) is seen in Las Vegas, Monday, Jan. 7, 2008. Battered by slow revenue growth and the popularity of social networking Web sites, Yahoo! Inc. is poised...   (Associated Press)
El gráfico muestra el precio de las acciones y ganancias de Microsoft Corp. y Yahoo Inc.; 2c 96,3 mm x 153,5 mm   (Associated Press)
This combination of two photos shows Microsoft founder Bill Gates, left, and Yahoo CEO Jerry Yang. Microsoft Corp. on Friday, Feb. 1, 2008 pounced on slumping Internet icon Yahoo Inc. with an unsolicited...   (Associated Press)
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Microsoft Wants Yahoo    Yahoo's Yang Years    Microsoft    Private Equity    Rupert Murdoch    Airline Industry    Google vs. Microsoft    Dow Jones In Motion    Mr. Softy    The Dow

Background

Mergers and Acquisitions
Wikipedia

The phrase mergers and acquisitions (abbreviated M&A) refers to the aspect of corporate strategy, corporate finance and management dealing with the buying, selling and combining of different companies that can aid, finance, or help a growing company in a given industry grow rapidly without having to...

» Read more about Mergers and Acquisitions at Wikipedia


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